Nigeria and the United Nations
This article uses bare URLs, which may be threatened by link rot. (July 2021) |
United Nations membership | |
---|---|
Membership | Full member |
Since | 7 October 1960 |
UNSC seat | Non-permanent |
Permanent Representative | Tijjani Muhammad-Bande |
Nigeria is a member of the United Nations. Nigeria did not become independent of the United Kingdom until 1960, while the United Nations had already been established by the Declaration by United Nations in 1942. Tijjani Muhammad-Bande is the permanent representative of Nigeria.[1]
In 2013, Nigeria contributed the fifth largest number of peacekeepers to United Nations peacekeeping operations.[2][3] Nigeria has recently served a two-year term from 2014–2015 as a temporary member of the United Nations Security Council. The United Nations helped negotiate adjusting the border of Nigeria and Cameroon resulting in the Greentree Agreement in 2006.[4]
See also[]
- List of countries by number of UN peacekeepers
- List of members of the United Nations Security Council
References[]
- ^ "Ambassador/Permanent Representative". nigeriaunmission.org. Retrieved 2020-06-22.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ https://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/resources/statistics/contributors.shtml
- ^ https://www.un.org/en/peacekeeping/resources/statistics/contributors_archive.shtml
- ^ Agbakwuru, Johnbosco (11 June 2014). "Nigeria: UN Boundary Adjustment Nigeria: UN Boundary Adjustment - Nigeria May Lose Obudu Resort, Agbokim Waterfalls to Cameroon - Ndoma-Egba". Vanguard. Lagos – via allafrica.com.
External links[]
Categories:
- Nigeria and the United Nations
- Foreign relations of Nigeria
- Nigerian government stubs
- United Nations stubs